890 likes | 908 Views
Learn about Internet technologies, Web programming, .NET development, and Web standards. Explore HTML, HTTP, cookies, and security protocols. Understand URIs and URL concepts.
E N D
Introduction to the Weband .NET Mark SapossnekCS 594 Computer Science Department Metropolitan College Boston University
Prerequisites • Basic computer skills • Experience using the World Wide Web • Experience developing object-oriented software
Learning Objectives • Overview of Web and Internet technologies • Review of existing Web programming technologies • Introduction to the .NET development platform
Agenda • Internet Technologies • Programming Languages and Paradigms • Programming the Web • .NET Overview
Internet Technologies The World Wide Web • A way to access and share information • Technical papers, marketing materials, recipes, ... • A huge network of computers: the Internet • Graphical, not just textual • Information is linked to other information • Application development platform • Shop from home • Provide self-help applications for customers and partners • ...
Internet TechnologiesWWW Architecture PC/Mac/Unix + Browser Client Request: http://www.msn.com/default.asp TCP/IP Network Response: <html>…</html> Web Server Server
Internet TechnologiesWWW Architecture • Client/Server, Request/Response architecture • You request a Web page • e.g. http://www.msn.com/default.asp • HTTP request • The Web server responds with data in the form of a Web page • HTTP response • Web page is expressed as HTML • Pages are identified as a Uniform Resource Locator (URL) • Protocol: http • Web server: www.msn.com • Web page: default.asp • Can also provide parameters: ?name=Leon
Internet TechnologiesWeb Standards • Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) • http://www.ietf.org/ • Founded 1986 • Request For Comments (RFC) at http://www.ietf.org/rfc.html • World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) • http://www.w3.org • Founded 1994 by Tim Berners-Lee • Publishes technical reports and recommendations
Internet TechnologiesWeb Design Principles • Interoperability: Web languages and protocols must be compatible with one another independent of hardware and software. • Evolution: The Web must be able to accommodate future technologies. Encourages simplicity, modularity and extensibility. • Decentralization: Facilitates scalability and robustness.
Internet TechnologiesHypertext Markup Language (HTML) • The markup language used to represent Web pages for viewing by people • Designed to display data, not store/transfer data • Rendered and viewed in a Web browser • Can contain links to images, documents, and other pages • Not extensible • Derived from Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML) • HTML 3.2, 4.01, XHTML 1.0
Internet TechnologiesHTML Forms • Enables you to create interactive user interface elements • Buttons • Text boxes • Drop down lists • Check boxes • User fills out the form and submits it • Form data is sent to the Web server via HTTP when the form is submitted
Internet TechnologiesHypertext Transport Protocol (HTTP) • The top-level protocol used to request and return data • E.g. HTML pages, GIFs, JPEGs, Microsoft Word documents, Adobe PDF documents, etc. • Request/Response protocol • Methods: GET, POST, HEAD, … • HTTP 1.0: simple • HTTP 1.1: more complex
Internet TechnologiesHTTP Request Method File HTTP version Headers GET /default.asp HTTP/1.0 Accept: image/gif, image/x-bitmap, image/jpeg, */* Accept-Language: en User-Agent: Mozilla/1.22 (compatible; MSIE 2.0; Windows 95) Connection: Keep-Alive If-Modified-Since: Sunday, 17-Apr-96 04:32:58 GMT Blank line Data – none for GET
Internet TechnologiesHTTP Response HTTP version Status code Reason phrase Headers HTTP/1.0 200 OK Date: Sun, 21 Apr 1996 02:20:42 GMT Server: Microsoft-Internet-Information-Server/5.0 Connection: keep-alive Content-Type: text/html Last-Modified: Thu, 18 Apr 1996 17:39:05 GMT Content-Length: 2543 <HTML> Some data... blah, blah, blah </HTML> Data
Internet TechnologiesHTTP • HTTP is a stateless protocol • Each HTTP request is independent of previous and subsequent requests • HTTP 1.1 introduced keep-alive for efficiency • Statelessness has a big impact on how scalable applications are designed
Internet TechnologiesCookies • A mechanism to store a small amount of information (up to 4KB) on the client • A cookie is associated with a specific web site • Cookie is sent in HTTP header • Cookie is sent with each HTTP request • Can last for only one session (until browser is closed) or can persist across sessions • Can expire some time in the future
Internet TechnologiesHTTPS • A secure version of HTTP • Allows client and server to exchange data with confidence that the data was neither modified nor intercepted • Uses Secure Sockets Layer (SSL)/Transport Layer Security (TLS)
Internet TechnologiesURIs, URLs and URNs • Uniform Resource Identifier (URI = URL or URN) • Generic term for all textual names/addresses • Uniform Resource Locator (URL) • The set of URI schemes that have explicit instructions on how to access the resource over the Internet, e.g. http, ftp, gopher • Uniform Resource Name (URN) 1) A URI that has an institutional commitment to availability, etc. 2) A particular scheme intended to identify resources e.g.urn:schemas:httpmail:subject
Internet TechnologiesMultipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) • Defines types of data/documents • text/plain • text/html • image/gif • image/jpeg • audio/x-pn-realaudio • audio/x-ms-wma • video/x-ms-asf • application/octet-stream
Internet TechnologiesMIME • Specifies character sets, e.g. ASCII • Supports multi-part messages • Originally designed for email, but also used in other places, such as HTTP
Internet TechnologiesBrowsers • Client-side application • Requests HTML from Web server and renders it • Popular browsers: • Netscape • Internet Explorer • Opera • others • Also known as a User Agent
Internet TechnologiesClients & Servers • Client and Server computers both have: • CPU • Memory • I/O • Disks • Network • Bus • Multi-tasking operating system • Applications
Internet TechnologiesClients & Servers • Clients • Generally supports a single user • Optimized for responsiveness to user • User interface, graphics • Servers • Supports multiple users • Optimized for throughput • More: CPUs (SMP), memory, disks (SANs), I/O • Provide services (e.g. Web, file, print, database, e-mail, fax, transaction, telnet, directory)
Internet TechnologiesProxy Servers & Firewalls • Proxy Server • A server that sits between a client (running a browser) and the Internet • Improves performance by caching commonly used Web pages • Can filter requests to prevent users from accessing certain Web sites • Firewall • A server that sits between a network and the Internet to prevent unauthorized access to the network from the Internet
Internet TechnologiesNetworks • Network = an interconnected collection of independent computers • Why have networks? • Resource sharing • Reliability • Cost savings • Communication • Web technologies add: • New business models: e-commerce, advertising • Entertainment • Applications without a client-side install
Internet TechnologiesNetworks • Network scope • internet: a collection of connected networks • Internet: a specific world-wide network based on TCP/IP, used to connect companies, universities, governments, organizations and individuals. Originated as ARPANET, funded by the US DoD. • intranet: a network based on Internet technologies that is internal to a company or organization • extranet: a network based on Internet technologies that connects one company or organization to another
Internet TechnologiesNetworks • Network technology is largely determined by scale: • Local Area Network (LAN): Span up to a few kilometers. Bus vs. ring topologies • Wide Area Networks (WAN): Can span a country or continent. WANs use routers as intermediate nodes to connect transmission lines
Internet TechnologiesNetworks • Network technology • Broadcasting • Packets of data are sent from one machine and received by all computers on the network • Multicast: packets are received by a subset of the machines on a network • Point-to-point • Packets have to be routed from one machine to another; there many be many paths • In general, geographically localized networks use broadcasting, while disperse networks use point-to-point
Internet TechnologiesNetworks OSI Model Layers TCP/IP Protocol Architecture Layers TCP/IP Protocol Suite Application Layer Presentation Layer Application Layer Telnet FTP SMTP DNS RIP SNMP HTTP Session Layer Host-to-Host Transport Layer TCP UDP Transport Layer Network Layer Internet Layer IP IGMP ICMP ARP Data Link Layer Network Interface Layer Ethernet Token Ring Frame Relay ATM Physical Layer
Internet TechnologiesNetwork Protocol Stack HTTP HTTP TCP TCP IP IP Ethernet Ethernet
Internet TechnologiesNetworks - Internet Layer • Internet Protocol (IP) • Responsible for getting packets from source to destination across multiple hops • Not reliable • IP address: 32 bit value usually written in dotted decimal notation as four 8-bit numbers (0 to 255); e.g. 130.50.12.4
Internet TechnologiesNetworks - Transport Layer • Provides efficient, reliable and cost-effective service • Uses the Sockets programming model • Ports identify application • Well-known ports identify standard services (e.g. HTTP uses port 80, SMTP uses port 25) • Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) • Provides reliable, connection-oriented byte stream • UDP • Connectionless, unreliable
Internet TechnologiesNetworks - Application Layer • Telnet: Remote sessions • File Transfer Protocol (FTP) • Network News Transfer Protocol (NNTP) • Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP) • Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP) • Post Office Protocol (POP3) • Interactive Mail Access Protocol (IMAP)
Internet TechnologiesNetworks - Domain Name System (DNS) • Provides user-friendly domain names, e.g. www.msn.com • Hierarchical name space with limited root names • DNS servers map domain names to IP addresses • .com • .net • .gov • .edu • .org • .mil • .jp • .de
Internet TechnologiesExtensible Markup Language (XML) • Represents hierarchical data • A meta-language: a language for defining other languages • Extensible • Useful for data exchange and transformation • Simplified version of SGML
Agenda • Internet Technologies • Programming Languages and Paradigms • Programming the Web • .NET Overview
Programming Languages • Machine code • Assembly language • High-level languages • Fortran, LISP, Cobol • C, Pascal, Basic, Smalltalk • C++, Eiffel • Java, C# • Scripting languages • Shell scripts, Perl, TCL, Python, JavaScript, VBScript
Programming Paradigms • Unstructured programming • Structured programming • Object-oriented programming • Component-based programming • Event-based programming
Programming ParadigmsUnstructured Programming • See “Go To Statement Considered Harmful” at http://www.acm.org/classics/oct95/
Sequence Conditional if then else switch Looping for i from 1 to n do while do until Functions Exceptions Programming ParadigmsStructured Programming
Programming ParadigmsObject-Oriented Programming • Objects have data and behavior • Data: members, fields, variables, slots, properties • Behavior: methods, functions, procedures • Using objects is easy • First instantiate the type of object desired • Then call its methods and get/set its properties • Designing new types of objects can be hard • Design goals often conflict: simplicity, functionality, reuse, performance
Programming ParadigmsObject-Oriented Programming • Key object-oriented concepts • Identity • Encapsulation • Data + behavior • Information hiding (abstraction) • Classes vs. instances • Polymorphism • Interfaces • Delegation, aggregation • Inheritance • Patterns
Programming ParadigmsComponent-Based Programming • Components • Independent modules of reuse and deployment • Coarser-grained than objects (objects are language-level constructs) • Includes multiple classes • Often language-independent • In the general case, the component writer and the component user don’t know each other, don’t work for the same company, and don’t use the same language
Programming ParadigmsComponent-Based Programming • Component Object Model (COM) • Initial Microsoft standard for components • Specifies a protocol for instantiating and using components in-process, across processes or across machine boundaries • Basis for ActiveX, OLE, and many other technologies • Can be created in Visual Basic, C++, .NET, … • Java Beans • Java standard for components • Not language-independent
Programming ParadigmsEvent-Based Programming • When something of interest occurs, an event is raised and application-specific code is executed • Events provide a way for you to hook in your own code into the operation of another system • Event = callback • User interfaces are all about events • onClick, onMouseOver, onMouseMove… • Events can also be based upon time or interactions with the network, operating system, other applications, etc.
Agenda • Internet Technologies • Programming Languages and Paradigms • Programming the Web • .NET Overview
Programming the WebClient-Side Code • What is client-side code? • Software that is downloaded from Web server to browser and then executes on the client • Why client-side code? • Better scalability: less work done on server • Better performance/user experience • Create UI constructs not inherent in HTML • Drop-down and pull-out menus • Tabbed dialogs • Cool effects, e.g. animation • Data validation
Programming the WebClient-Side Technologies • DHTML/JavaScript • COM • ActiveX controls • COM components • Remote Data Services (RDS) • Java • Plug-ins • Helpers • Remote Scripting
Programming the WebDynamic HTML (DHTML) • Script that is embedded within an HTML page • Usually written in JavaScript (ECMAScript, JScript) for portability • Internet Explorer also supports VBScript and other scripting languages • Each HTML element becomes an object that has associated events (e.g. onClick) • Script provides code to respond to browser events